A passenger, A, on a high-speed spaceship sees a light flash bouncing vertically between two mirrors and, knowing the speed of light (which is a constant), measures the time between bounces. An observer, B, on the ground sees the light moving at the same speed but it travels farther between bounces. The observer calculates the time between bounces to be longer than that measured by A. Thus B sees time passing more slowly on the fast-moving spaceship—an effect called time dilation.